A burst of power makes the rudder effectiveWhat would you / could you do as directional control becomes a problem ?
as the slipstream passes over it ... however
if you are flying an antique this is not an option,
if the carburetor lacks an accelerator pump.
With sufficient runway length the above
works. If you're tight on runway, time to
put the throttle all the way in, leave it there,
and get the hell out of dodge.
I was talking to a former tailwheel student
of mine today, whom is now flying a biplane.
He mentioned a sketchy landing, and I
reminded him to overshoot - get the power
on! - if there was any doubt during the
approach, flare or rollout.
While Bob Hoover could transform a bad
approach into a good landing, that is not
a reasonable expectation for a low-time
pilot.
Throttle goes in, another circuit, another
0.1 in your logbook. Unless the mother
is on fire.